I started woodworking and its so great seeing a "simple" project like this in the night before going to bed. Great work! people like you made me get into woodworking. Thanks for this!
I really like your technique, especially the use of the "rubbed joint", I also use it and it works very well . I was in Seoul many , many years ago, before I was a woodworker, I enjoyed it very much, the food , the sightseeing and most of all the people, very friendly and curious. Thanks for your videos!
nice to meet you.! The place where I live is an hour away from Seoul It is called Gwanggyo. When the corona ends, please visit South Korea again~ Thank you!
I am a young woodworker and I absolutely love your videos. They’re so inspiring and peaceful to watch. I would love to visit your workshop because it’s amazing. Did you go to school to become so good at furniture making?
nice to meet you. I live in Gwanggyo, South Korea. I started by learning work in a small workshop, and after that, I went to study with various masters.
May I ask what the dimensions of this were, I would love to make one for myself. I would love to train with masters, woodworking is just a calming experience for me and I really enjoy making things with my hands.
Very nice, very calm work. The glue up stage is the most worrying for me; I long ago switched to slow cure epoxy for those assemblies which are complicated - having had other assemblies “dry up” on me when using standard adhesive. This assembly was simple - so normal glue was great. In woodworking, there are usually hundreds of ways of completing a joint, a mortise or whatever. There are also a few bad ways - which normally mean not safe. Every woodworker would have made this lamp in a slightly different way: not better, not worse; just different. I particularly liked the use of the spokes haves to get a great finish on the end grain of the base; it’s a great technique but one which needs practice. As,e for the router plane; I love that way to get a flat bottom to a rabbit, dado or mortise. A couple of ways in which I would have made this lamp differently - the mortise for the square upright. I would have hogged out the majority of the mortise using a router or forstner bit; then chiselled the sides and then router plane on the bottom. If you are chiselling out such a mortise, you should creep up on the sides. If you hog out the mass; with a chisel the same width as the width of the mortise, mark out the finished dimensions of width and length; then mark inside those finished lines by, say, 2mm or 1/16”; then chisel the remainder of the mortise creeping up on those inside lines. When you have done that, you can then chisel to the finished lines. The reason for doing this is that you may/will get the timber checking or splitting on your larger chisel cuts; with this method any such splits should be confined to your inside lines and not the finished lines. It takes a fraction longer but will save you from a potential issue. On that point of chisels and router planes, sharpness of the blades is absolutely key; you will not get the kind of edge that you see on this video with a blade which is less than very, very sharp. However you choose to sharpen your blades, keep it simple. I keep my stones and strop right by my workbench; having them so near means that it’s easy just to sharpen up the secondary bevel. In doing something like the mortise shown here - and in a relatively hard wood like one of the oaks, I would touch up the blades before starting; touch up halfway through and then touch up again before putting the chisels back in their case. Nobody ever chiselled or planed timber and said afterwards “I wish I had sharpened them less”. It was very good to see the internal grooves of the upright and them being used for threading the wire. Well done for that. We all learn from past mistakes and I confess that I have done something very similar to find that the glue has obstructed the channel for the wires. So, I would either set the cable inside the 2 pieces of upright and then glued or use a thin metal tube with a “mouse” and string inside (a mouse in this context is something like a heavy screw or nut or something to which you tied a thin string; you then thread that mouse and string inside the tube, often just using gravity. That means that when assembled, you tie the finished cable to one end of the mouse string and pull the cable through. As I said, no criticism of what this craftsman shows and does; if it works, it’s right.
Hello. Google translate is a little lacking, but I read the article twice Thank you so much for the detailed explanation. Hope you have a nice start to the week. thank you.!
I love your reconstruction and I mostly agree with your points. People should always retain their pride, determinations and integrity ( which many other Asian countries have lost becoming subservient to US commands) . However, as for Chiang Kai-shek , let’s not forget that in Taiwan they had years of white terror and oppression … so much so that now they are removing his statues from public spaces …. And democracy, lately , as shown all its flows .
Hello.. i watched your videos, all are impressive, it was nice. Whats the brand of your sliding table saw... im inlove.. verry acurate.... i have tools but homemade.
I started woodworking and its so great seeing a "simple" project like this in the night before going to bed. Great work! people like you made me get into woodworking. Thanks for this!
I'm glad it was helpful~
Woodworking has started now, so I hope you enjoy it.
And always don't forget the safety carpentry!
Thanks!
Always nice to see a photo of the finished product at the beginning of the video, so one knows what is being made and if you like it.
Thanks for telling me.
I'll put a picture in the next video.
You're mine Is blowing!!
I like your vision of new things on simple things!!
From: Guatemala!
Thank you very much for watching!
Greetings from South Korea!
This is the most satisfying thing I have seen today.
thanks for watching..!
Simple yet beautiful! Nice to see that new plane put to use also.
Thank you~ The new plane is using very well!
Lampada minimalista
Veramente bella.che cura nella realizzazione!!!👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Grazie!🧡
I am a huge fan! Thank you very much for the exceptional work and inspiration!
I'm glad I could help. Thanks for watching!
I really like your technique, especially the use of the "rubbed joint", I also use it and it works very well . I was in Seoul many , many years ago, before I was a woodworker, I enjoyed it very much, the food , the sightseeing and most of all the people, very friendly and curious. Thanks for your videos!
nice to meet you.!
The place where I live is an hour away from Seoul
It is called Gwanggyo.
When the corona ends, please visit South Korea again~
Thank you!
Your work is just marvelous and your craftmanship couldn't be better
Thank you for enjoying watching!
I really enjoyed the video. Your work is beautiful!
Thanks so much !
A pretty and delicate lamp, congratulations!
Thank you very much~^^
Excellent work. Experienced Craftsman make it look easy. Thank you.
Thank you^^ have a nice day!
Great job and all of the videos so peacefull, thank you 😇
Thank you for a good look!!
Outstanding build and video! Love the attention to detail you took while making the lamp, a true inspiration. Beautiful all around.
thank you^^ !
Keren sekali karya anda👍
Thank you for the compliment!
Very inspired, all you were build, like jusy amazing..
Thanks for the video
Thanks for watching! ❤❤❤
Wow what a work ❤
thank you~~! 😍😍😍
인스타애서 우연히 보고 계속 보고 잇어요ㅠㅠ,,,,, 저도 언젠간 직접 만들어보고 싶은데 ㅠㅠ 너무 멋집니다👍🏼
저도 페라리 가족분들 영상 너무 잘봤습니다.^^ 앞으로 자주 시청할께요~^^ 감사합니다!
I am a young woodworker and I absolutely love your videos. They’re so inspiring and peaceful to watch. I would love to visit your workshop because it’s amazing. Did you go to school to become so good at furniture making?
nice to meet you.
I live in Gwanggyo, South Korea.
I started by learning work in a small workshop, and after that, I went to study with various masters.
May I ask what the dimensions of this were, I would love to make one for myself. I would love to train with masters, woodworking is just a calming experience for me and I really enjoy making things with my hands.
So relaxing video 😅
Thank you^^ 😁
Amazing job as the others my Friend!
thank you ! friend
잘생겼다~~~~
ㅎㅎㅎㅎㅎ
Nice job ! 👍👍👍😊
thank you brother!!
당연히 외국사람인줄 알았는데 자세히 보니 한국분이시네요. 저도 회사 은퇴하면 목공을 배워서 책상이며 의자 같은거 만들고 싶네요.
참 멋지십니다. 얼마나 배우면 흉내라도 낼 수 있을까요? ㅎㅎ
안녕하세요!
간단한 의자는 취미로 6개월~1년 정도 배우시면 만드실수 있을거 같습니다.
시청해 주셔서 정말 감사합니다.!
Excelente trabalho, parabéns!!!!
Obrigado~
Nice one! 👍
thank you^^
Amazing!!!!
thank you~!^^
Прекрасная работа!👍👏 осталось прикупить пресс-клещи😉
Спасибо!
Your work is so impressive. I just subscribed. The flowering trees are beautiful. Where are you? Best wishes on continued success.
Thanks for watching.
It is Gwanggyo in Korea. It is summer now.^^
Very nice, very calm work. The glue up stage is the most worrying for me; I long ago switched to slow cure epoxy for those assemblies which are complicated - having had other assemblies “dry up” on me when using standard adhesive. This assembly was simple - so normal glue was great.
In woodworking, there are usually hundreds of ways of completing a joint, a mortise or whatever. There are also a few bad ways - which normally mean not safe.
Every woodworker would have made this lamp in a slightly different way: not better, not worse; just different.
I particularly liked the use of the spokes haves to get a great finish on the end grain of the base; it’s a great technique but one which needs practice. As,e for the router plane; I love that way to get a flat bottom to a rabbit, dado or mortise.
A couple of ways in which I would have made this lamp differently
- the mortise for the square upright. I would have hogged out the majority of the mortise using a router or forstner bit; then chiselled the sides and then router plane on the bottom. If you are chiselling out such a mortise, you should creep up on the sides. If you hog out the mass; with a chisel the same width as the width of the mortise, mark out the finished dimensions of width and length; then mark inside those finished lines by, say, 2mm or 1/16”; then chisel the remainder of the mortise creeping up on those inside lines. When you have done that, you can then chisel to the finished lines. The reason for doing this is that you may/will get the timber checking or splitting on your larger chisel cuts; with this method any such splits should be confined to your inside lines and not the finished lines. It takes a fraction longer but will save you from a potential issue.
On that point of chisels and router planes, sharpness of the blades is absolutely key; you will not get the kind of edge that you see on this video with a blade which is less than very, very sharp. However you choose to sharpen your blades, keep it simple. I keep my stones and strop right by my workbench; having them so near means that it’s easy just to sharpen up the secondary bevel. In doing something like the mortise shown here - and in a relatively hard wood like one of the oaks, I would touch up the blades before starting; touch up halfway through and then touch up again before putting the chisels back in their case. Nobody ever chiselled or planed timber and said afterwards “I wish I had sharpened them less”.
It was very good to see the internal grooves of the upright and them being used for threading the wire. Well done for that. We all learn from past mistakes and I confess that I have done something very similar to find that the glue has obstructed the channel for the wires. So, I would either set the cable inside the 2 pieces of upright and then glued or use a thin metal tube with a “mouse” and string inside (a mouse in this context is something like a heavy screw or nut or something to which you tied a thin string; you then thread that mouse and string inside the tube, often just using gravity. That means that when assembled, you tie the finished cable to one end of the mouse string and pull the cable through.
As I said, no criticism of what this craftsman shows and does; if it works, it’s right.
Hello. Google translate is a little lacking, but I read the article twice
Thank you so much for the detailed explanation.
Hope you have a nice start to the week.
thank you.!
@@squarerulefurniture thank you for taking the trouble to have it translated. I hope you and your family stay healthy.
Love this! How did drill a hole through the entire length of the pole to run the cables for the light?
I split the tree in half, dug a long groove , and glued it together with precision.
Просто и изящно!
Спасибо ^^
Nice
thank you!
Великолепно и талантливо! Получился достойный предмет интерьера.
Спасибо ^^ Хорошей недели ~
Reget sitik langsung di lap.....
Iku angel diinterpretasikake.
Matur nuwun kanggo nonton.
goooooood~ job !
thank you~!! brother~!
So Nice
thank you^^
I love your reconstruction and I mostly agree with your points. People should always retain their pride, determinations and integrity ( which many other Asian countries have lost becoming subservient to US commands) . However, as for Chiang Kai-shek , let’s not forget that in Taiwan they had years of white terror and oppression … so much so that now they are removing his statues from public spaces …. And democracy, lately , as shown all its flows .
Interpretation is difficult.
Thanks for watching.
I love the lamp. I have a question about the chairs at the end of this video (12:56). Did you make those? If so, is there a video or plans available?
I have plans to make a video this year.
Thank you for your attention!
@@squarerulefurniture a gentle reminder that we still are interested in the video of the chairs at the end of this video. Thanks.
Como hizo el olor de palo largo para el cable no vi
¿Estás hablando del palo largo bajo la luz? Estaba un poco ajustado.
How did you drill such a long hole for the cord?
I cut the tree in half, made a groove and glued it very well.
If you look closely at the video, there is an answer~
1:52
Is this the first time that you use Lie-Nielsen's router plane (received package in another video)? Fine job as usual.
Yes. I used it for the first time. The order of the videos has changed a bit. You are very keen~^^
Finishing natural oil?
auro 126 oil ^^
Mais lindo resultado. Parabéns pelo trabalho. Desculpe perguntar, a medeira que você usa é muito bonita, qual o nome por favor.
I use North American white oak and walnut.
The wood used for this desk is white oak.
Que coisa linda, meu Deus
Obrigado por assistir.
Me encanta
Gracias.
Muy bonita !
Qué medidas tiene ?
La interpretación es difícil... Gracias por mirar.
Exquisite
thank you!
Hello.. i watched your videos, all are impressive, it was nice. Whats the brand of your sliding table saw... im inlove.. verry acurate.... i have tools but homemade.
Hello
The model I use is the Laguna 12/8 model.
조명 기둥 전선들어가는 구멍 뚫는 영상이 없네요...
안녕하세요. 00:57 초 보시면 홈파는 영상이 있습니다. 한나무를 반으로 쪼개서 홈을 파고 다시 붙여서 구멍을 만들어요~
Amazing work! What type of finish did you use?
I use auro 126 oil.😍
조명 부속품 구매처 정보좀 부탁드립니다.
라이팅피아입니다~~
Very nice! Can I know what oil did you apply?
AURO 117 1time -> AURO 126 times 3 times -> Completely dry
Thank you!
Can you tell me the dimensions on the pole and base?
The circle is 380 and the column is 42*42.
@@squarerulefurniture Thanks so much - it's excellent work, I think I'll build myself one!
Don't forget safe carpentry!
👍👍👍
thankyou~!
Amazing! Do you sell these lamps?
Custom made is possible, but shipping seems difficult.
Nice job!!! What kind of finish for the oak?
Enjoy the Auro 126 + water-based varnish finish.
How long does it take for you to make 1?
Wouldn't the overall shape, excluding the finish and parts, be completed in a day or so?
Fantastique
Je vous remercie
top
thank you~~ 😉
I love uuu
thank you^^ 😋😋🤩🤩
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏......🇵🇪
thank you^ ^
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